6.25.2017

St. John Vianney on Salvation

Good Christians, who labor to save their souls and to work out their salvation, are always happy and contented; they enjoy beforehand the happiness of Heaven: they will be happy for all eternity.

ST. JOHN VIANNEY

THERE ARE many Christians who do not even know why they are in the
world.

"Oh my God, why have You sent me into the world?" "To save your soul." "And
why do You wish me to be saved?" "Because I love you." The good God has
created us and sent us into the world because He loves us; He wishes to save us
because He loves us. To be saved, we must know, love and serve God. Oh,
what a beautiful life! How good, how great a thing it is to know, to love and
serve God! We have nothing else to do in this world. All that we do besides is
lost time. We must act only for God, and put our works into His hands We
should say, on awaking, "I desire to do everything today for You, my God! I
will submit to all that You shall send me, as coming from You. I offer myself
as a sacrifice to You But, God, I can do nothing without You. Do help
me!"

Oh, how bitterly shall we regret at the hour of death the time we have
given to pleasures, to useless conversations, to repose, instead of having
employed it in mortification, in prayer, in good works, in thinking of our poor
misery, in weeping over our poor sins; then we shall see that we have done
nothing for Heaven. Oh, my children, how sad it is! Three-quarters of those who
are Christians labor for nothing but to satisfy this body, which will soon be
buried and corrupted, while they do not give a thought to their poor soul, which
must be happy or miserable for all eternity. They have neither sense nor reason:
it makes one tremble.

Look at that man, who is so active and restless, who makes a noise in the
world, who wants to govern everybody, who thinks himself as important, who
seems as if he would like to say to the sun, "Go away, and let me enlighten the
world instead of you." Some day this proud man will be reduced at the utmost to
a little handful of dust, which will be swept away from river to river, and at last
into the sea.

See my children, I often think that we are like those little heaps of sand
that the wind raises on the road, which whirl round for a moment, and are
then scattered. We have brothers and sisters who are dead. Well, they
are reduced to that little handful of dust of which I was speaking. Worldly
people say it is too difficult to save one's soul. Yet nothing is easier. To
observe the Commandments of God and the Church, and to avoid the seven capital
sins; or if you like to put it so, to do good and avoid evil: that is all. Good
Christians, who labor to save their souls and to work out their salvation, are
always happy and contented; they enjoy beforehand the happiness of Heaven: they
will be happy for all eternity. While bad Christians, who lose their souls, are
always to be pitied; they murmur, they are sad, they are as miserable as stones;
and they will be so for all eternity. See what a difference!

This is a good rule of conduct to do nothing but what we can offer to the
good God. Now, we cannot offer to Him slanders, calumnies, injustice, anger,
blasphemy, impurity, night clubs, dancing; yet that is all that people do in the
world. Speaking of dances, St. Francis of Sales used to say that "they were like
mushrooms, the best were good for nothing." Mothers are apt to say indeed, "Oh,
I watch over my daughters." They watch over their attire, but they cannot watch
over their hearts. Those who have dances in their houses load themselves with a
terrible responsibility before God; they are answerable for all the evil that is
done -- for the bad thoughts, the slanders, the jealousies, the hatred, the
revenge. ... Ah, if they well understood this responsibility they would never
have any dances. Just like those who make bad pictures and statues, or write bad
books, they will have to answer for all the harm that these things will do
during all the time they last. Oh that makes one tremble!

See, my children, we must reflect that we have a soul to save, and an
eternity that awaits us. The world, its riches, pleasures, and honors will pass
away. Let us take care, then. The saints did not all begin well; but they all
ended well. We have begun badly; let us end well, and we shall go one day and
meet them in Heaven.